Sexuality Policy Watch

Anti-Gender Campaigns in Europe: Mobilizing against Equality

2018-03-27_Zagreb

SPW has the pleasure to announce the recently published book Anti-Gender Campaigns in Europe: Mobilizing against Equality, edited by Roman Kuhar and David Paternotte.

Description

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After decades of steady progress in terms of gender and sexual rights, several parts of Europe are facing new waves of resistance to a so-called ‘gender ideology’ or ‘gender theory’. Opposition to progressive gender equality is manifested in challenges to marriage equality, abortion, reproductive technologies, gender mainstreaming, sex education, sexual liberalism, transgender rights, antidiscrimination policies and even to the notion of gender itself.

This book examines how an academic concept of gender, when translated by religious organizations such as the Roman Catholic Church, can become a mobilizing tool for, and the target of, social movements. How can we explain religious discourses about sex difference turning intro massive street demonstrations? How do forms of organization and protest travel across borders? Who are the actors behind these movements? This collection is a transnational and comparative attempt to better understand anti-gender mobilizations in Europe. It focuses on national manifestations in eleven European countries, including Russia, from massive street protests to forms of resistance such as email bombarding and street vigils. It examines the intersection of religious politics with rising populism and nationalistic anxieties in contemporary Europe.

A flag of the anti-gay marriage movement "La Manif Pour Tous" (Demonstration for all) is seen on the foreground while people demonstrate during a mass protest on May 26, 2013, in Paris against a gay marriage law. France on May 18 became the 14th country to legalise same-sex marriage after President Francois Hollande signed the measure into law following months of bitter debate and demonstrations. PLacard at centre reads "Same-sex marriage, no". AFP PHOTO THOMAS SAMSON
A flag of the anti-gay marriage movement “La Manif Pour Tous” (Demonstration for all) is seen on the foreground while people demonstrate during a mass protest on May 26, 2013, in Paris against a gay marriage law. France on May 18 became the 14th country to legalise same-sex marriage after President Francois Hollande signed the measure into law following months of bitter debate and demonstrations. PLacard at centre reads “Same-sex marriage, no”. AFP PHOTO THOMAS SAMSON

Table of contents

1. Introduction, Roman Kuhar and David Paternotte

2. “Gender Ideology” in Austria – Coalitions around an Empty Signifier, Stefanie Mayer and Birgit Sauer

3. “No Prophet is Accepted in His Own Country”: Catholic Anti-Gender Activism in Belgium, Sarah Bracke, Wannes Dupont and David Paternotte

4. Embryo, Teddy Bear-Centaur and the Constitution: Mobilizations against “Gender Ideology” and Sexual Permissiveness in Croatia, Amir Hodžić and Aleksandar Štulhofer

5. Resisting “Gender Theory” in France: A Fulcrum for Religious Action in a Secular Society, Michael Stambolis-Ruhstorfer and Josselin Tricou

6. “Anti-Genderismus”: German Angst? Paula-Irene Villa

7. Anti-Gender Discourse in Hungary: A Discourse without a Movement? Eszter Kováts and Andrea Pető

8. Defending Catholic Ireland, Mary McAuliffe and Sinead Kennedy

9. Italy as a Lighthouse: Anti-Gender Protests Between the “Anthropological Question” and National Identity, Sara Garbagnoli

10. “Worse than Communism and Nazism Put Together”: War on Gender in Poland, Agnieszka Graff and Elżbieta Korolczuk

11. Russia as the Savior of European Civilization: Gender and the Geopolitics of Traditional Values, Kevin Moss

12. Changing Gender Several Times a Day: The Anti-Gender Movement in Slovenia, Roman Kuhar

13. From the Pulpit to the Streets: Ultra-Conservative Religious Positions against Gender in Spain, Monica Cornejo and J. Ignacio Pichardo

14. The Anti-Gender Movement in Comparative Perspective, David Paternotte and Roman Kuhar

Split Protest Sven Milekic Photo
Thousands of people from all over Croatia gathered in Split on April 12 to protest the ratification of the Council of Europe’s so-called Istanbul Convention on preventing and combating violence against woman and domestic violence. Photo: Sven Milekic/BIRN

 Reviews

An essential reading to better understand the widespread reactionary backlash in today’s Europe. This book is a much-needed wake-up call. While anti-gay marriage movements have long been regarded as anecdotical, the authors show how deep their cultural and religious roots are. This meticulous account is an important step towards reinventing minority rights across European borders.

Bruno Perreau, Cynthia L. Reed Professor, Massachusetts Institute of Technology

In this well-documented comparative study, the authors offer country by country analyses and evidence of international collaborations in campaigns against gender equality. They provide striking new insight into the way the epithet “gender ideology” has become a powerful instrument on the European political scene, wielded by coalitions of right-wing Catholics, Protestant evangelicals, and populists to protect “traditional” sex roles and to challenge the institutions of democracy.

Joan W. Scott, Institute for Advanced Study

‘Gender Ideology’ fracases now erupting in Europe and Latin America constitute key sites in which to examine how the ‘said return of the religious’, sexual politics and the crisis of democracy are deeply imbricated today. Anti-Gender Campaigns in Europe is a superb cartography of these imbrications in twelve Western and Eastern European countries. It finely charts contextual differences without losing sight of the significant transnational implications of these politics, particularly in what concerns the role of the Catholic Church.

Sonia Correa, Research Associate at the Brazilian Interdisciplinary Association for AIDS and co-chair of Sexuality Policy Watch, Rio de Janeiro, Brazil

The book examines how an academic concept of gender, when translated by religious organizations such as the Roman Catholic Church, can become a mobilizing tool, but also the target of social movements. The authors whose texts are included in the book analyze the situation in 12 European countries in an effort to understand the sources of these mobilizations, their specific manifestations in different countries and their dissemination beyond national borders. .. The book provides a comparative overview of anti-gender movements and discussed their strategies and rhetorical tropes.

Tihana Bertek, Vox Feminae

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